Kirkus Reviews
In NBA superstar Curry's latest, a young Black girl worries that her hearing aids will prevent her from joining her new school's soccer team.Though Zoe's practiced all summer, she's nervous. What if she's not good enough? And if she puts her hair up to play, kids will see her hearing aids. Fearing the others won't accept her, Zoe removes her aids before a game. But playing without them proves difficult, and Zoe flees, lamenting that she'll "never just be ordinary." But fellow player Mila, who wears protective glasses, asks, "Who wants to be ordinaryâ¦when you can be EXTRAORDINARY!" Mila and her friends Marley and Brooklyn call Zoe's attention to other athletes, such as a baseball player who uses a wheelchair and a runner with a prosthetic leg: "Can ordinary people do that?" Marley explains that Zoe's dedication, and her hearing aids, make her extraordinary. Buoyed, Zoe-wearing her hearing aids-makes the team, and together they win the championship game. Author Curry appears on the last page and explains that kids must "find the courage and strength to overcome" challenges. Though it's refreshing that Zoe's disability isn't her defining quality, the use of the word inspirational-a term bearing patronizing connotations for many disabled people-to describe her story risks muddying this point. Still, occasionally heavy-handed speech-balloon dialogue notwithstanding, Zoe's teammates' accepting attitudes are reassuring, and Bowers' bright cartoon illustrations are engaging. Mila is pale-skinned, Brooklyn is brown-skinned, and Marley presents Asian.Earnest and encouraging. (Picture book. 6-8)
School Library Journal
(Fri Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2024)
K-Gr 2 —In his second picture book, NBA superstar Curry encourages young readers to recognize how their differences make them extraordinary. Zoe is starting a new school and is nervous to try out for the soccer team. She wears hearing aids and is afraid people will make fun of her. At first she tries to hide her hearing aids, but with positive encouragement from her new classmates, she realizes that what makes her different also makes her extraordinary. There are many picture books that already exist with similar messages, but this book will appeal to Curry's fans. A mix of text blocks and speech bubbles give the story a comic-book style to match Bowers's illustrations. Her colorful images have a style similar to manga, with large-eyed characters and an abundance of bright colors. Diversity is displayed throughout the book with characters who have many different skin tones; also in the pictures are people using wheelchairs or who have prosthetics. As in the previous book, Curry's cartoon image appears at the end with a list of items to find hidden in the book. VERDICT A bright, positive book with a familiar message told by a sports hero.—Heidi Dechief